SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS VOLUME 153, NUMBER 4 Publication 4744 CfjarlesJ 3B. anb iWarp "^aux ®Haltott Eesiearcf) jTunb A STUDY OF THE EOCENE CONDYLARTHRAN MAMMAL HYOPSODUS (With 13 Pjjvtes) By C LEWIS GAZIN Senior Scientist, Department of Paleobiology United States National Museum Smithsonian Institution CITY OF WASHINGTON PUBLISHED BY THE SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION PRESS liJ(J^l®^^A2R^ [J^C 3 Vi?l THE AM.£Elv/Aif MtTSSUK Of KATlTP.AJ. HISTORY SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS VOLUME 153, NUMBER 4 Publication 4744 CfjarlesJ ®, anb iHarp "^aux Malcott l^esiearcf) Jfunb A STUDY OF THE EOCENE CONDYLARTHRAN MAMMAL HYOPSODUS (With 13 Plates) By C. LEWIS GAZIN Senior Scientist, Department of Paleobiology United States National Museum Smithsonian Institution CITY OF WASHINGTON PUBLISHED BY THE SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION PRESS NOVEMBER 27, 1968 PORT CITY PRESS, INC. BALTIMORE, MD., U. S. A. CONTENTS Page Introduction 1 Acknowledgments 2 History of investigation 3 Geographic and geologic occurrence 12 Classification 13 Environment 31 The skeleton of Hyopsodus 34 Skull 34 Endocranial cast 40 Mandible 43 Dentition 44 Vertebrae 52 Pectoral girdle 54 Humerus 55 Radius 56 Ulna 57 Manus 58 Pelvic girdle 63 Femur 64 Tibia 65 Fibula 66 Pes 67 Summary of relationships 7Z References 76 Explanation of plates 83 Explanation of abbreviations for plates 90 ILLUSTRATIONS PLATES (All plates following p. 92.) 1. Hyopsodus skull from the middle Eocene of Wyoming. 2. Hyopsodus skull portions from the early and middle Eocene of Wyoming. 3. Hyopsodus skull portion from the middle Eocene of Wyoming. 4. Hyopsodus skulls from the early and middle Eocene of Wyoming. 5. Hyopsodus skull portion and endocranial cast from the early Eocene of Wyoming. 6. Hyopsodus skull portion, endocranial cast, and deciduous teeth from the Eocene of Wyoming. 7. Hyopsodus type-specimens from the middle Eocene of Wyoming. 8. Hyopsodus type-specimens from the early Eocene of Wyoming. 9. Hyopsodus type-specimens from the early, middle, and late Eocene. 10. Hyopsodus fore limb and foot material from the middle Eocene of Wyoming. 11. Hyopsodus skull, fore limb and foot material from the middle Eocene of Wyoming. 12. Hyopsodus hind limb and foot material from the middle Eocene of Wyoming. 13. Hyopsodus vertebrae, ribs, scapula, and pelvis from the middle Eocene of Wyoming. TEXT FIGURES 1. Frequency distribution for length of M, in San Juan Basin material of Hyopsodus 18 2. Comparison of frequency distributions for length of M» in Hyopsodus from typical sections of early Eocene in Wyoming 19 3. Comparison of frequency distributions for length of Mj in Hyopsodus between Lysite horizons of Wyoming and San Jose of New Mexico 20 4. Comparison of frequency distributions for length of M» in Hyopsodus from Lysite horizons of Wyoming 21 5. Comparison of frequency distributions for length of Mi in Hyopsodus between Lost Cabin horizons of Wyoming and San Jose of New Mexico 22 6. Comparison of frequency distributions for length of M» in Hyopsodus from areas of the lower Bridger 25 7. Comparison of frequency distributions for length of M, and M* in Hyopsodus from the upper Bridger 26 8. Comparison of frequency distributions for length of Mj and M' in Hyopsodus from upper and lower members of the Bridger fohmation 28 9. Hyopsodus skeletal drawing 32 10. Restoration of Hyopsodus 33 iv Cfjarlcfi; B. anb iJlarp ^aux Maltott 3^e£(carclb jfunb A STUDY OF THE EOCENE CONDYLARTHRAN MAMMAL HYOPSODUS^ By C LEWIS GAZIN Senior Scientist, Department of Paleobiology United States National Museum Smithsonian Institution (With 13 Plates) INTRODUCTION Undoubtedly the most characteristic mammal that existed dur- ing Eocene time in North America was the small condylarth Hyopso- dus. It is represented in the earliest to essentially the latest horizons of this period, but is not recognized surely as such in the preceding Paleocene, and evidently became extinct before the beginning of the Oligocene. Significantly, moreover, remains, such as jaw fragments and teeth, representing various species, while but sparsely encountered in later Eocene horizons, demonstrate that Hyopsodus was one of the most common of the land mammals in the early Eocene and quite the most common in the middle Eocene. Nevertheless, well-preserved skulls or comprehensive portions of skeletons are exceedingly rare. Hyopsodus was first described (Leidy, 1870) nearly a hundred years ago and closely followed the earliest of the fossil mammal genera to be named from the Eocene of North America; preceded only by Anchippodus (1868) from the New Jersey marls, and by Omoinys (1869) and Patriofelis (1870) from the Bridger formation of Wyoming. In its subsequent history of investigation, interpreta- 1 Study of early Tertiary mammals was aided by grant G10686 from the National Science Foundation. SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS, VOL. 153, NO. 4 2 SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS VOL. 1 53 tion of its relationships has been nearly as varied as that for its par- tially contemporary Meniscotherium, and has been considered related to such distinctive groups as artiodactyls, perissodactyls, probosci- deans, and notoungulates, as well as allocated to the Primates, Insecti- vora, Condylarthra, and Cope's Bunotheria. The only prior comprehensive study of Hyopsodus was that by Matthew in 1909(b), as a part of a monograph on Bridger materials, continued in 1915(b) to include the earlier Eocene collections. Men- tion may also be made of brief reviews by Osborn in 1902 and Loomis in 1905, and a statistical interpretation by Olson and Miller in 1958, to be discussed more fully in the following pages. The writer's interest in the genus was spurred largely by newer materials of unusual quality and better documented collections, permitting a more detailed study and a much needed taxonomic revision of some 31 species names that have been applied to the genus. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The rather large collections of Hyopsodus material, particularly from the Bridger formation, in the U. S. National Museum, were the basis for the present study ; nevertheless, various universities and other museums aided immeasurably in permitting me to extend inves- tigations to their collections and to borrow type-materials and certain other specimens for illustration and further study in Washington. The American Museum of Natural History (AM), through the kindness of Drs. Edwin H. Colbert, Bobb SchaeflFer, and Malcolm C. McKenna, has permitted me to study Hyopsodus and related materials in the various Eocene collections, to borrow certain specimens having associated skeletal material, and has allowed me to re-illustrate the several type-specimens in these collections. Drs. Elwyn L. Simons and James A. Hopson permitted me to review Hyopsodus material in a newly acquired Yale collection (YPM) from Lysitean beds in the Bighorn Basin, and to borrow a Marsh type for illustration. Also Dr. Peter Robinson while at Yale sent me for study the upper Eocene specimens of Hyopsodus found in the Marsh collection. Information on Hyopsodus was included in my study of faunal associations in the Eocene materials from the De Beque formation through the courtesy of Drs. Rainer Zangerl, Robert H. Denison, and William D. Turnbull at the Field Museum of Natural History. Data on horizons for localities yielding these latter materials were furnished by Mr. Bryan Patterson, formerly at that institution. Dr. Glenn L. Jepsen graciously made it possible for me to review the Hyopsodus materials at Prince- NO. 4 A STUDY OF HYGPSODUS—GAZIN 3 ton University, in collections from the early Eocene of the Bighorn Basin, made by his parties. Dr. Albert E. Wood made arrangements for me to study the Lysitean materials at Amherst (AC) and to borrow Loomis' tj-pes for illustration. The upper Eocene materials in the Carnegie Museum from the Badwater area in the Wind River Basin and the Three Forks area of Montana were made available for my study through the kindness of Drs. Craig C. Black and Mary R. Dawson. Much appreciated loans of other type-specimens for re- illustrating were graciously made by Dr. Alfred M. Bailey, director of the Denver Museum of Natural History (DMNH), through the kind offices of Dr. G. Edward Lewis of the U. S. Geological Survey; Dr. Donald E. Savage of the University of California (UC) ; and Mr. Bryan Patterson of the Museum of Comparative Zoology (MCZ). Dr. Dale A. Russell of the National Museum of Canada (NMC) very kindly prepared a cast for me of a type preserved in Ottawa. Mr. Lawrence B. Isham, staff illustrator for the Department of Paleobiology in the U. S. National Museum (USNM), made the pencil shaded drawings for the plates accompanying this report. He also drafted the frequency distribution charts and restorations included with the text. HISTORY OF INVESTIGATION Discovery and description.—The original description of Hyopsodus was made by Leidy in 1870. The type of the first named species, H. paulus, is a portion of a lower jaw with much worn molars, found near Fort Bridger ^ and sent to Leidy by F. V. Hayden. In the follow- ing year Marsh (1871) described a lower jaw portion with the better part of three, somewhat less worn, anterior cheek teeth as Hyopsodus gracilis. According to Marsh, "The specimens representing this species at present were found by the writer at Grizzly Buttes, Wyoming." Only one specimen, however, was described. It is interesting to note that Leidy (1872b), realizing that Marsh's "H." gracilis did not belong to Hyopsodus, gave a new form, Microsyops, the species name gracilis because he believed that Marsh's "H." gracilis was the same. Cope (1872), however, was more nearly correct in referring Marsh's species to Notharctus, although in 1873 he followed Leidy in referring it to Microsyops. "Hyopsodus" gracilis was subsequently made the type of the primate Smilodectes by Wortman (1903, vol. 16, p. 362). 2 According to Leidy, but according- to Matthew (1909b, p.
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